Disturbing The Universe
Disturbing The Universe
Disturbing The Universe
By Freeman Dyson
A book review essay by Sally Morem
It is fitting that Freeman Dyson quotes these lines from a T.S. Eliot poem. It
is also fitting that he takes the name of his book from that last line. Both
Dyson and Eliot realize that that’s precisely what human beings do. We not
only dare to disturb the universe, we do it every day.
It’s very likely that when we do go into space, we will take our Earth
environments with us, just as our ancestors from Africa took their tropical
climate with them in the form of clothing, shelter, and fire. We may then
diversify these environments, creating new ones never seen on Earth, over
the generations of space development to come. Designing space colony
environments may well become a major new art form. At that point in our
cultural evolutionary development, gray and green may blend and become
one.
Disturbing the Universe does what this kind of book is supposed to do. It
encourages the reader to question long-held beliefs and conventional
thought. It helps the reader engage in truly unconventional thought…at
which point the truly attentive reader begins to question the questioner.
Do I dare?
Of course.